Parched Offense Dries Up in Valley of the Sun

    Grand Canyon limited senior guard Clint Allard to nine points and one assist, but Allard pulled down a team-high five rebounds in the Tritons’ loss. (Sanh Luong/Guardian file)

    The UCSD men’s basketball team returned home this week after
    another tough non-conference season opener. Despite holding an early lead and
    attempting to make a late comeback, UCSD fell 72-62 to regional opponent and
    former California Collegiate Athletic Association foe Grand Canyon University
    on Nov. 24. The Tritons now stand at 0-2 on the season as they prepare for
    their home and conference opener this weekend.

    Sophomore forward Andrew Browning netted four points in 12 minutes coming off the bench against the Antelopes. UCSD’s dormant offense needs a jolt for its home opener against Cal State Stanislaus on Nov. 30. (Sanh Luong/Guardian File)

    UCSD scored first against the Antelopes as it did the
    previous weekend at San Diego State, extending the 7-2 lead with two early
    three-pointers by sophomore guard Jordan Lawley. Grand Canyon responded with a
    7-1 run, but the Tritons bench would help tie the game again with a jumper by
    sophomore forward Andrew Browning and back-to-back layups from junior center
    A.J. Maulhardt. UCSD would re-take the lead 16-14 on a Lawley jumper before the
    Antelopes tied it again. Following a timeout, junior guard Shane Poppen’s
    jumper gave the Tritons another two-point lead with 10:58 left in the first
    half. The Antelopes’ Milee Karee responded with a four-point play, drawing a
    foul on a successful three-pointer and converting the free-throw attempt, and
    then knocked down another three to give Grand Canyon a 23-18 advantage. The
    Antelopes would extend their lead to 12 points and head into intermission up
    37-25, as UCSD managed only seven points — with five from junior forward Henry Patterson
    — during the first half’s final 10 minutes.

    Junior guard Andrew Hatch said the Tritons’ inability to
    penetrate the key contributed to the team’s first-half struggles.

    “Grand Canyon stayed in a zone the entire game and we had
    trouble getting good looks inside 20 feet,” he said. “We missed a lot of open
    shots, but for our team to be successful we have to work inside out.”

    Patterson again put UCSD on the board first during the
    second half with two free throws. The Antelopes, though unable to put UCSD
    away, were able to retain their double-digit lead for most of the second half.
    The Tritons faced their biggest deficit in the game with 6:22 left to play as
    an 11-2 Grand Canyon run put the score at 63-46. However, the Tritons, led by
    Hatch, fought their way back within striking distance.

    Hatch, who missed all of last season due to an injury, hit
    two three-pointers as part of an 11-0 UCSD run that pulled the Tritons within
    six points with 1:13 left to play. Despite another Hatch three-pointer with 31
    seconds left, Grand Canyon converted nine of 11 free-throw attempts down the
    stretch to hold on for the win.

    Hatch said his flurry of field goals beyond the arc came
    from good opportunities created by other Tritons.

    “Getting our team back in the game … came from my teammates
    — driving and hitting the gaps, then kicking the ball out and giving me the
    opportunity to knock down open three-point shots,” he said.

    Hatch added that he hopes to be a veteran leader and perform
    well in the clutch.

    “I just want to contribute as much as I can this year,” he
    said. “I want to look back on my years here as a time when UCSD men’s
    basketball became a force in the CCAA.”

    Hatch led UCSD in scoring with 12 points on four of five
    three-point attempts, while also dishing out four assists in 15 minutes off the
    bench. Lawley and senior guard Clint Allard also scored double-digits for the
    Tritons with 11 and 10 points, respectively. Allard posted eight assists and
    five rebounds, both tying game-highs. The assist total fell just short of his
    career-best nine assists recorded against Grand Canyon in January 2006.

    As a team, UCSD shot 41.5 percent from the field, including
    54.2 percent in the second half when they held Grand Canyon to below 40 percent
    field-goal shooting. The Antelopes were able to build their lead with a
    blistering 66.7 percent first-half field-goal percentage and by converting 10
    of their 19 three-point attempts. Grand Canyon also out-rebounded UCSD, 34-23,
    and recorded three blocks in the game.

    UCSD begins a five-game homestand this weekend, hosting Cal
    State University Stanislaus in its home-opener on Nov. 30 and Chico State
    on Dec. 1. Both games are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. tip-offs in RIMAC Arena.

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